What does a failed country look like?

“We have a [kosher] white supremacist establishment that shame even Donald Trump [NY mafia,] spend billions on an incompetent and unnecessary military, and let a brutal [and racist] police force [and private security/spy firms like Thompson and Clark] run the country [and commit murder, intimidation and other heinous crimes] with absolute impunity… [more…]

_________________

Democracy? Freedom of Expression?

“Only a lamebrain would believe the subjects in The Five Eyes, the most spied-on, extrajudicially-governed nations in the world, are free.” –A reader

_______________________

If feckless Kiwis were blind, they’d still be called hawkeyes in intellectually maligned Godzone!

Foreigners Killed in NZ Since 2000

Death & Injury Claims Against Google, Others

Google (Alphabet Inc.) and others are heavily filtering this blog to protect their business and political interests. They systematically block vital news, health information and travel advice posted here, which could potentially save you and your loved ones from harm. If your family is killed or injured while visiting New Zealand, you can claim damages against the evil entities because of the censorship.

AN APPEAL TO ALL CREDIBLE HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS

Over 40,000 foreigners have been violently killed, or seriously injured by NZ tourism machination since 2000. Unfortunately, Axis of Evil continues to deny the would-be victims receiving the warnings posted here.

Vanishing Victims

Many of the fatalities go unreported. Hundreds of critically injured, if true, would require weeks or months of hospitalization.

NZ's incident emergency response easily exceeded capacity with just a few dozen injured tourists in the aftermath of the White Island eruption. Clearly, the system cannot cope with hundreds of critically injured.

Predictably, many of the unnamed victims simply vanish without trace. We believe those misreported as injured are the missing dead, who're then secretly inhumed to avoid damage to NZ's blood economy.

YOU MUST INVESTIGATE, OR AT LEAST PUBLICIZE!

WORLD’S DEADLIEST DESTINATION FOR FOREIGNERS

More foreigners are violently killed in NZ than in rest of the 'developed' world combined.

5500 foreigners have been violently killed & 35000 more seriously injured in NZ since 2000.

[The many hundreds of foreigners that are missing in NZ without a trace are not included!]

At least 98 percent of the casualties would’ve been avoidable, if NZ gave a f*ck!

Slamming the prison door in the murderer’s face after victim’s life has bolted: “[Visitors who’d be murdered in NZ should rest assured that] we will do everything we can to find those responsible for serious crimes and hold them to account.” —NZ police

Tiny time bombs releasing toxins in parts of our body where other weapons cannot reach

Microbeads are tiny plastic particles used as an abrasive in many personal care products. They are commonly found in products like facial scrubs, soaps and shampoos. Credit: greatlakes.org/campaigns/microbead-menace/

Microplastics, or microbeads, and tiny plastic fibers and fragments, absorb toxic chemicals commonly found in the water. They are mistaken for food by small fish and wildlife, which are consumed by larger animals and humans.

According to a recent research, published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, about 430,000 tonnes of microplastics are being added to European fields each year, and 300,000 tonnes in North America. [China’s share would be about 500,000 tonnes, with India and ROW contributing an additional 750,000 tonnes.]

About 83 percent of the drinking water samples collected on five continents tested positive for the presence of plastic fibers, says Orb Media.

Sources of Invisible Plastics [Source: Orb Media]

1. SYNTHETIC FIBERS IN THE WASH
Synthetic clothes like ﬂeece, acrylic, and polyester emit thousands of microscopic ﬁbers with every wash. An estimated 1 million tons of these tiny ﬁbers are discharged into wastewater each year, where more than half evade treatment and escape into the environment.

2. TIRE DUST
Styrene butadiene tire dust is washed into sewers, and from there into streams, rivers, and oceans. Cars and trucks emit more than 20 grams of tire dust for every 100 kilometers they drive. It adds up. Norway [population 5.3 million,] for example, produces a kilogram of tire and road dust each year for every Norwegian woman, man, and child.

3. PAINTS
Dust from road markings, ship paint, and house paint contribute more than 10 percent of
microplastic pollution in the oceans. Studies show that paint dust coats the ocean surface.

4. SECONDARY MICROPLASTICS
At least 8 million tons of mishandled plastic waste washes into the world’s oceans, rivers and lakes each year. These forks, bags, straws, and takeout containers churn and fragment in the frigid seas, breaking down into ever-smaller pieces to join the marine and human food chains — the microplastics of the future. We have produced more plastic in the last 10 years than in the entirety of the last century.

5. SYNTHETIC FIBERS IN THE AIR
Scientists are only beginning to examine how microscopic ﬁbers reach the atmosphere, and their role as a source of land and marine pollution. One guess is that common abrasion
— the simple friction of your limbs brushing against each other — causes clothing ﬁbers to
break off into the air. like a cat shedding fur. A 2015 study in Paris estimated that between
three and 10 tons of airborne ﬁbers reach that city’s surface each year.

6. MICROBEADS
Banned in facial cleaners and some cosmetics in the US. and Canada, it is estimated that more than 8 trillion microbeads polluted U.S. waterways in 2015.

Microplastics in Auckland Water

Up to 15 per cent of Auckland’s tap water is taken from the Waikato River, downstream from the city of Hamilton and wastewater treatment plants.

“Plastic microfibres leach endocrine-disrupting chemicals and carry persistent organic pollutants in increasing concentrations up through our food chain,” said Dr Trisia Farrelly, who co-founded the New Zealand Product Stewardship Council, and specialised in research on plastic waste.

Microfibres were now present in most fish tested in New Zealand, she said.